Skip to content

oldgalileo/shakti

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

17 Commits
 
 

Repository files navigation

Netflix Shakti API

Table of Contents

Overview/Getting Started

NOTE: This writeup assumes you have a Netflix account, and have written/can write the code to send the requests yourself. This an overview of how to use Shakti, and documentation thereof. If you're just here for some cool Netflix tricks, here's an image guide hosted on Imgur for a bunch of categories Netflix wont let you easily navigate to.

If you have questions, comments, or concerns feel free to drop me an email: howard@getcoffee.io

Basic Request

Most, if not all, of Netflix's data is fetched through their API called "Shakti". The request path looks like so:

POST /api/shakti/$VALUE$/pathEvaluator

Where $VALUE$ is the 'build identifier' (presumably the current Shakti build id). This value can be found in a globally accessible object via the following: netflix.appContext.state.model.models.serverDefs.data.BUILD_IDENTIFIER

Assuming you are sending this while logged in on Netflix page, either via a bookmarklet or simply the developer console, the headers are also simple:

        'Accept': 'application/json, text/javascript, */*',
        'Accept-Language': 'en-US,en;q=0.8',
        'Content-Type': 'application/json',
        'Content-Size': PATH SIZE IN BYTES,
        'Cookies': ...

Since I couldn't determine any method for generating the cookies, I'm continuing with the assumption that you have the cookies, whether that be by sending the request in a browser that has the cookies or otherwise. I accomplish this through a headless browser. You may notice that the content size mentions the "path". This is the core of our request, and is the body. This is how we're going to actually specify what data we want. This comes later.

The body format is comprised of two components:

{
    'authURL': ...,
    'paths': [...],
}

The authURL is stored in a globally accessible object through the following: netflix.reactContext.models.userInfo.data.authURL. That's the easy part. The path is where we get into the thick of it.

Building The Path

The paths component is an array of all the different pieces you want. Each piece is an array which represents one "type" and the attributes of that type you wish to retrieve. The attributes vary between types, however the path will usually follow the structure below:

...
    'paths': [
        [ // first piece
            "type",
            "ID",
            "attribute 1",
            "attribute 2",
        ],
        [ // second piece, etc.
            ...
        ]
    ]
...

Every path piece contains at least a type, an ID, and one or more attributes. When you send a query for a basic path, the server responds with the attributes of the type-instance that matches the ID.

We can use the show "Marvel's Agents of Shield" as an example, which has an ID of 70279852. Shakti uses the type videos for both movies and TV shows and distinguishes between them via attributes. To get the name of the show, the path would look like so:

...
    'paths': [
        [
            "videos",
            "70279852",
            "title",
        ],
    ]
...

More complicated paths will use selectors and selector ranges.

...
    'paths': [
        [ // first piece
            "type",
            "ID",
            "selector",     // Not always required, Application dependent 
            {               // Selector Range
                "from": -1,
                "to":   25,
            },
            "attribute 1",    // Can also look like ["attribute 1", "attribute 2", ...],
            "attribute 2",
        ],
        [ // second piece, etc.
        ...
        ]
    ]
...

Documentation

Types

Genres

Attributes

Name Description Response Type Example
id ID int 26065
length # of Videos int 75
name Name string "Exciting TV Shows"
menuName Name in menus string "Exciting TV Shows"
subgenres Subgenres Object N/A
summary Basic genre information Object ...
su Video ID Array ...
trackIds N/A Object ...
requestId N/A string N/A
rw N/A Array ...

Videos

This is the most dynamic and complex of the broader types. Unlike the rest, the videos type has three implicit types which can alter the response: movies, shows, and episodes.

As of right now, the subtypes are not properly reflected below and their attributes poorly differentiated. It's unclear the best way to format this, and will be revised in the future.

Attributes

Name Description Response Type Example
id ID int 70136120
availability Playable now Object ...
availabilityEndDateNear Leaving soon N/A N/A
bookmarkPosition Where user left off int -1
boxArts URL to the box art (usually in landscape). This is just a key required in the request. It's then followed by one of the following keys: (_342x192, _550x124, _665x375, _1280x720). It also requires a key that defines the type. The current keys found are: "webp" and "jpg". Object ...
cast Cast Array ...
copyright N/A N/A N/A
creditsOffset When credits start int 1353
current Current episode Array ...
delivery Viewing Options (4k...) Object ...
directors Directors Array ...
dpSupplementalMessage N/A string ""
episodeBadges N/A Array ...
episodeCount # of episodes int 192
evidence Reason to watch show Object ...
hasSensitiveMetadata N/A boolean false
isNSRE N/A boolean false
isOriginal Netflix Original Series boolean false
maturity Maturity info Object ...
numSeasonsLabel Readable # of seasons string "9 Seasons"
queue In user queue Object ...
regularSynopsis Meta synopsis string "This hit c..."
releaseYear Year released int 2012
requestId N/A string N/A
runtime Movie/Show runtime int 1382
seasonCount # of seasons int 9
seasonList Seasons Array ...
summary Basic video information Object ...
synopsis Synopsis string "The boss i..."
tallBoxarts URL to the Box art in the same aspect ratio as the DVD cover art Object ...
title Title string "The Office..."
userRating User rating info Object N/A
watched Already watched bool false
writers Writers Array ...

Seasons

Name Description Response Type Example
id ID int 70023522
hiddenEpisodeNumbers N/A bool false
length # of Episodes int 6
name Readable name string "Season 1"
shortName Shortened name string "S1"
episodes Episodes Object N/A

LoLoMos

This is the most unintuitive type by name. LoLoMos is short for a "List of List of Movies" (https://twitter.com/arungupta/status/624402051116568576)

Person

Attributes

Name Description Response Type Example
id Person ID int 20055888
headshot Photo resource description Object N/A
length # of Videos involved in int 4
name Name string "Terry Crews"
requestId N/A string N/A
trackIds N/A Object N/A
(0...length) Video ID Array N/A

Selectors

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published